fuuka is the most responsible character in yotsuba&! but at the same time she’s a total human disaster how did this happen
anyone who says fuuka has bad fashion sense is a liar and a scoundrel
What do you guys think of an anime adaptation of Yotsuba?
Now, Azuma said that he was unsatisfied with the Azumanga Daioh adaptation, because he felt that it wasn’t suited for anime. This is why a Yotsuba adaptation hasn’t come to light.
I do agree, it could be hard to make an anime about Yotsuba. But I think it could work, like if you adapted two chapters at once for one episode. Or do ten minute episodes instead of the usual twenty minutes. But I think overall people would support it!
I have volume ten of Yotsuba in Japansese:

It’s not obvious but the cover is actually a flap:


When you take it off, you have Danbo! Volume 14 has a cover variation where Yotsuba is dressed like a princess:


But for the localization…


There are no cover flaps, so the extra cuteness is denied. =(
Koiwai Yotsuba from Yotsuba!
130mm rerelease of Yotsuba and Taifuu! from Yotsuba&!, manufactured by Chara-ani
Y'all I have a MIGHTY NEED!!!
12.) They
11.) Can’t
10.) Be
9.) Listed
8.) Because
7.) They
6.) Are
5.) All
4.) Unique
3.) And
2.) Different
1.) Yotsuba&!
My friend asked me, “Doesn’t Yotsuba wear a yellow raincoat?” after I regaled her with information about Little Nightmares. I said, “Can’t be, Six’s raincoat looks different!”
Anyway, I believe that they could rescue the Pajama Kid and then all three of them could escape. Or at least take over the Maw.
I think that there’s some kind of mindset in a lot of creative communities (authors, artists, musicians) that your work needs to be groundbreaking and thought-provoking for it to matter. That in order for it to be considered worthy of its medium, it must have a greater purpose.
And if you ask me, its bullshit.
God, it puts so much stress on a creator to have to be important to someone else. I have seen so many people give up because their work isn’t making a statement, that it’s ‘fluff but no substance.’ As though there’s only room for so many people in a community of creators that only people with a point can get in.
If it made someone laugh, it’s important.
If it made someone smile, it’s important.
If someone looks back on it fondly, even for a moment, it’s important.
If you enjoyed making it, even if you never shared it, it’s important.
Sing songs about your cat, draw pictures of lizards eating popsicles, and write a series of novels about time-traveling alpaca.
The world is already full of super-important stuff. Write fluff.